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yay With pictures and fake news clippings, it's a great book for all ages. Although the election is now over (thank you, baby jesus), this book strongly reminds us why another term of W. ideals is anything but ideal.
By comparing words and deeds Begala makes a very good case why if you liked the last 8 years you would love a McCain Presidency. Bush and his policies. Third TermPaul BegalaThis book begins with the 2000 Republican Presidential primary and the incredible smears by the Bush campaign against the McCain campaign and their total lack of truth. Amazingly it go on to say how after only a short cooling off period McCain completely embraces George W.
It should have been "must" reading for undecided voters. Paul Begala makes the case with research, not rancor, that Senator McCain's record, rhetoric and proposals promise a continuation, not a break from, the Bush Administration's economic, social, deregulatory, military and foreign polices. He avoids the common pitfalls of such political accounts: this is neither the dry scorecard of a policy "insider," nor the zingy yet unsubstantiated riposte of the "pundit." Rather, it is a mature, concise, specific accounting of Republican policies, John McCain's support for them, and their devastating effects on the nation.
See The Real McCain: Why Conservatives Don't Trust Him and Why Independents Shouldn't's cover too. First Papa BushThen Baby BushNow here comes little minny-me BushHow else has more faithfully voted the Bush line all of these yeares.Meticulously researched with thirty pages of footnotes to back things up, Begala gives us the best thing to consider in the coming week before the elections (or re-selections).And you will love reading it, far more than you'll love a GOP win.McCain promises us endless warfare. These two are joined at the hip. Who said he hates Bush. How long before he brings it home.Read this book. Vote for Hope, audaciously.This is not the only book out now with a cover showing these two old white guys swapping sweaty hugs.
Finally, Begala points out that earmarks are a trivial issue for McCain to focus on, and that he supports privatization of Social Security, cuts to Medicaid and Medicare. Both are stubborn, see the world in black and white, take a "my-way-or-the-highway" approach, and attack the motives of those who disagree. Both are intellectually incurious on domestic issues (Bush on everything else as well), both have a hot temper, and both declared "the fundamentals of the economy" are strong - just before the great credit collapse.McCain has voted with Bush 91% of the time, though flip-flopped on abortion, the mortgage crisis, gay marriage, Bush tax cuts, and estate tax repeal. "The biggest myth of Campaign 2008 is that John McCain is fundamentally different from George Bush" - so opens Paul Begala in "Third Term." His purpose in writing the book is to explode that myth. As for "Change" - McCain has 134 lobbyists on staff or raising money for his campaign. Both were the first-born of American dynasties, partied through elite educations, and have large "unearned" fortunes. It is not, however, a book that emulates the Swift Boat Veterans' lies about John Kerry with lies about John McCain.Begala goes on to point out the remarkable personal similarities between Bush and McCain. Both displayed general ignorance on Iraq - both prior to and after the invasion.
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